My Name is Paul H Cosentino. I started this Blog in 2011 because of what I believe to be wrongdoings in town government. This Blog is to keep the citizens of Templeton informed. It is also for the citizens of Templeton to post their comments and concerns.

We've spent a lot of time over the past couple of years
talking about soaring healthcare premiums brought on by Obamacare. The
price increases have been outright crippling for those forced to buy
policies on the exchanges, up well over 100% over the past 4 years, on
average, with some states up over 200%.

But premiums aren't the only
part of health plans that have soared under Obamacare. For those people
who are lucky enough to actually be able to afford a plan, you simply
bought yourself the opportunity to cover even more of your healthcare
costs out of pocket as deductibles have also soared.

A new TransUnion Healthcare analysis revealed a
significant rise in the percentage of patients that didn’t pay their
hospital bills in full. Approximately 68% of patients with bills
of $500 or less did not pay off the full balance during 2016 – up from
53% in 2015 and 49% in 2014.

“There are many reasons why more patients are
struggling to make their healthcare payments in full, the most prominent
of which are higher deductibles and the increase in patient
responsibility from 10% to 30% over the last few years,” said
Wiik, author of the book and also principal for healthcare revenue cycle
management at TransUnion. “This shift in healthcare payments has been
taking place for well over a decade, but we are seeing more pronounced
changes in how hospital bills are paid during just the last few years.”

But that's not even the worst of it, patient responsibility
on 14% of hospital bills in 2016 exceeded $3,000, an obligation which
only 1% of patients were able to cover on a timely basis.

- 63% of hospital bills were $500 or less; of those hospital bills, 68% were not paid in full in 2016.

- 14% of hospital bills were $3,000 or more; of those hospital bills, 99% were not paid in full in 2016.

- 10% of hospital bills were $500 to $1,000; of those bills 85% were not paid in full in 2016.

Meanwhile, the soaring deductibles are putting even more
pressure on razor thin hospital margins and have caused a rash of
closures since 2010. Per CNBC:

The Affordable Care Act has given more people access to
health care, but it has driven deductibles up, in some cases, making it
harder for patients to pay, said John Yount, TransUnion's vice president
of product for the health-care division. Hospital margins are
already between only 2 and 4 percent on average, Yount said, and that
margin quickly narrows when more patients can't pay their bills.

"What it means is as a patient takes on more
responsibility, then it is likely that that debt, which is a component
of uncompensated care, has a potential to increase for hospitals," Yount
said. "It's likely that as they provide services and their bad debt
increases, it could be difficult to continue certain operations."

Since 2010, 79 rural hospitals have closed,
according to the North Carolina Rural Health Research Program. Yount
warned that number will continue to increase if more patients can't pay
their bills.

So fight on, Democrats. Obamacare is clearly a piece of legislation worth saving.

**************************************

Meanwhile in Massachusetts:

Massachusetts dodges a bullet if GOP health-care bill collapses

The Senate GOP bill that would repeal ObamaCare was near collapse yesterday, after Maine. Sen. Susan Collins and other Republicans announced they wouldn’t vote for the legislation that the Congressional Budget Office says could increase the number of people without health insurance by 22 million, reports the NYT. The crumbling support for the bill came after Gov. Charlie Baker, another Republican, informed the state’s Congressional delegation that the GOP plan could result in 264,000 Massachusetts residents losing their insurance and cost the state more than $8.2 billion in lost federal funds over the next eight years, reports the AP at the Telegram.

David Bernstein at WGBH takes a look at the political reverberations felt by the Senate plan across New England, with regional Republicans mostly feeling the heat: Baker in Massachusetts, Collins in Maine and Gov. Phil Scott in Vermont. The Globe’s Joan Vennochi wonders if Baker couldn’t be more of a leader on the health-care front: “It hasn’t been crickets from Baker. But it has been classic Charlie, which means cautious, clinical, and circumspect.”

And:

Another Republican is speaking out against Senate plan: Jane Swift

Former Massachusetts Gov. Jane Swift, a Republican, explains in a Globe op-ed why she’s against the Senate GOP health-care plan. She has a very personal reason: Her daughter, Lauren, who’s battling juvenile arthritis.